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Word: nessing (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...teeming excitement by his eloquence, has tingled in every polyglot branch: English and French, Irish and Italian, German and Polish, Hungarian and Japanese, black and white, Swede and Magyar, all have mouthed his name in ecstasy, flnging the wonderful sound to the blue God-given skies until the vast ness of America roared...

Author: By John G. Short, | Title: H-R 'X' Approved by HUC; Anarchists Support Wallace | 10/9/1968 | See Source »

...generation and the folk-rock musical supposedly speaks to us and for us as Oklahoma cannot. But Tom Sankey's The Golden Screw is a pretender to the folk-rock name which rejects our commitments to urban-ness, peace and humanity and insults our perspicacity. It idealizes instead a Dylanesque young folk singer who goes through the protest song stage into electronic rock on the rock road to success. At the end, when our hero is king of the music mountain, he sings a last rock song about "Flipping Out". Then he asserts his individuality by saying "fuck...

Author: By Deboraii R. Waroff, | Title: The Golden Screw | 8/6/1968 | See Source »

...Black children everywhere can hold their beautiful black heads high and beam with a black pride that no one can take from them. For the Black man has shouldered the weight of this country's evils and yet maintained a kind of cool perseverance, drive and stick-to-itive-ness that can never be overlooked nor forgotten...

Author: By Harold Vann, | Title: A Black Man's Lament | 7/30/1968 | See Source »

Also: Robert G. McGahey, III; John H. McGuckin, JR.; John A. McKinnon; Richard H. Meadow; Matthew D. Miller; Peter J. Millock; Kenneth M. Minkoff; Stephen M. Morris; Thomas A. E. Moseley, III: William C. Mullen; Mark R. Nelson; Stephen A. Ness; Hugh W. Nevin, Jr.; Peter D. Nurkse; Richard N. Papper; John M. Parson...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: 104 Elected to Phi Beta Kappa | 6/11/1968 | See Source »

Last stop, but a favorite of many, was Stanley Landsman's Infinity Chamber, in which 6,000 tiny lights on the black, mirrored walls were reflected to create what seemed like an infinity of mirrors. The illusion of airy weightless ness thus engendered permitted viewers, in the words of the show's organizer, Ralph T. Coe, to "leap straight into the fourth dimension, experiencing what the astronauts have described when they walk in space." Still better, as far as the frazzled gallerygoers were concerned, everyone could leap straight out of the fourth dimension without having to worry about...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Exhibitions: Transistorized Tunnel of Light | 6/7/1968 | See Source »

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